Nevada State College recently issued the following announcement on August 30.
All Nevada State College Scorpions, families and community members over the age of 12 are invited to get a COVID-19 vaccine at Nevada State College! College students must be fully vaccinated by November 1st to enroll for Spring 2022 classes, which means first dose of the vaccine is needed October 1st.) To support our community, Nevada State is hosting four free vaccine clinics in partnership with Immunize Nevada. These are walk-in clinics – no appointment necessary. Health insurance is not required.
Nevada State College COVID-19 Vaccine Clinics | Rogers Student Center, Ballroom C
- Tuesday, August 31 (10:30 a.m. – 1:30 p.m.)
- Thursday, September 9 (10:30 a.m. – 1:30 p.m.)
- Tuesday, September 28 (10:30 a.m. – 1:30 p.m.)
- Thursday, October 7 (10:30 a.m. – 1:30 p.m.)*
Will NSC be offering choices of the vaccine?
- Yes, attendees have the choice to receive the Pfizer, Moderna, or Janssen vaccine.
- No, but you can! We will have vaccine clinics spaced 28 days apart, so you are able to come back for your second shot here. You are also free to schedule your second shot appointment elsewhere.
- Yes. If you received your first COVID-19 vaccine in Nevada, you can come in and get your second dose as long as your first Pfizer dose was received over 21 days ago or your first Moderna dose was received over 28 days ago. Please note that per CDC guidelines, “You should get your second shot as close to the recommended 3-week or 4-week interval as possible. However, your second shot may be given up to 6 weeks (42 days) after the first dose, if necessary.”
- Yes. Everyone’s privacy is protected. Getting the vaccine will not affect immigrant status.
- Absolutely. The COVID-19 Vaccine Clinics are open to everyone.
- For now, 3rd dose eligibility applies only to severely immunocompromised individuals. Contact coronavirus@nsc.edu to find out if you fall into an approved category for immunocompromised individuals.
- COVID-19 vaccines are effective at helping protect against severe disease and death from variants of the virus that causes COVID-19 currently circulating. If enough Nevadans are vaccinated, we can keep businesses, restaurants and schools open.
- Widespread vaccination will end this pandemic the way it ended smallpox, polio, and measles.
Original source can be found here.